No- Aside from a moral and ethical standpoint, two different species almost never have successful offspring when crossbred- Even when there is an offspring produced- such as a liger or a mule-their are multiple health problems and sterility of future generations
There are so many facts about Hampshire sheep. This is a large breed of sheep that got its name from the Hampshire county in England. It is a cross breed of Cotswold's, Southdown's and other breeds.
no you cannot breed sheep. you can breed cows or horses, but not sheep.
A suffolk cross is as the name implys, a sheep that has a suffolk as one of its parents. The one parent is a purebred suffolk and the other parent can be anything. It could be a purebred of another breed or a mix.
Give each sheep you want to breed wheat.
No. Hunters can get a license that allows them to hunt Bighorn or Dall's Sheep. No species nor breed of sheep called the Longhorn Sheep has ever existed in the wild nor in domestication. The only place you would find a "Longhorn Sheep" is on the video game Guild Wars 2, which actually looks more like a cross between a Jacob Sheep (the only sheep breed with four horns) and an Oryx, which is a large African antelope.
Mules are a cross breed of a horse and a donkey. Most mules are sterile and can't bare offspring.
A Dall is a sheep breed.
Nothing - cattle and sheep cannot be cross-bred.
The most popular meat sheep is the suffix/cross breed. With reletivly short fur and large fore and hind legs its largest purpose is meat over breeding and milk
Columbian Sheep is a breed of sheep. They are a larger framed white face sheep.
Artificial selection. They select the sheep with the best qualities for meat production and breed him/her to other sheep with similar qualities and characteristics.
Farmers in South West England have a breed of sheep that loose their wool automatically in the spring, this breed is called the Exlana.